SEC’s crypto staking crackdown has uncertain consequences for DeFi: Lido Finance

Ethereum

A crackdown by the United States securities regulator on crypto staking could have unintended consequences for decentralized finance (DeFi), according to the head of business development at Lido DAO.   

In a Feb. 13 Bloomberg report Jacob Blish, who leads business development at Lido’s decentralized autonomous organization (DAO), said the most significant risk would be if the SEC eventually concluded that no U.S. citizen can interact with crypto staking services, including protocols.

“The biggest risk I personally see as a U.S.-based person is if they come down and say you can no longer even interact with or contribute to these types of protocols.”

“Then me, as a contributor to the DAO, does that mean I can’t work on Lido anymore? Do I have to go leave and do something else?” Blish added.

The governance of Lido is managed by the Lido DAO with members from all over the world voting on critical decisions that steer the protocol.

In the wake of the SEC launching lawsuits and other enforcement actions against crypto firms, Blish joined a growing number of people in the crypto industry calling for more transparency around regulations and rules going forward, saying:

“The most disappointing thing is we as an industry keep getting asked for transparency, but then me as a U.S. citizen, I get no transparency and how [regulator’s] decision-making process is going.”

On Feb. 9 the SEC charged crypto exchange Kraken with “failing to register the offer and sale of their crypto-asset staking-as-a-service program” prompting the exchange to halt offering staking to its U.S. customers.

The SEC’s latest action saw Coinbase co-founder & CEO, Brian Armstrong, defend staking in a Feb. 9 Twitter post, saying it would be “a terrible path for the U.S.” if a staking ban was to happen.

Related: Paxos facing SEC lawsuit over Binance USD — Report

Paul Grewal, Chief Legal Officer at Coinbase built on Armstrong’s tweets on Feb. 10 asking for clearer rules for the industry.

“The public shouldn’t have to parse complaints in federal court to understand what a regulator expects,” Grewal said.

Articles You May Like

Elon Musk reposts call to end the US Federal Reserve Bank 
AI agents give retail crypto traders an edge: Giulio Xiloyannis, X Hall of Flame
Ethereum hits $3.2K, surpassing Bank of America market cap
These crypto ETFs are ‘call options’ on the US elections
Bitcoin sudden pump to $81K annihilates $180M shorts in half a day